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Interview: Fred Fleitz
Okay, so I'm pleased to be joined by Fred Fleitz. He was a Trump administration official and then he worked for the National Security Council in 2018. He also worked for the State Department under George W. Bush. Now, he's a vice chair at the America First Policy Institute. We want to talk to him about various aspects of the first Trump administration's record and what that might foretell about a second Trump administration.
M. Tracey: Fred Fleitz, thank you for joining us.
Fred Fleitz: Good to be here.
M. Tracey: So, I want to go through the Trump administration's policy on Venezuela, if you don't mind, in light of the election yesterday, the Trump administration, including this, was spearheaded by John Bolton, who you were the chief of staff to for some time. Their idea was to inflict maximum economic pain on Venezuela with the idea that this would destabilize the government and empower the Venezuelan opposition and eventually, you could have instituted in Venezuela a more America-friendly government and ousted the socialist or the leftist rulers under Maduro and Chavez, which had been in power for quite a while at that point in Venezuela. But it seems to me, especially with Maduro yesterday having declared victory in the election – and we could call into doubt whether the results are legitimate, I'm not there, you're not there I have been observing the polling stations to see whether everything is aboveboard electorally in terms of vote administration in Venezuela, but, regardless, the Central Committee that runs election administration in Venezuela declared Maduro to be the winner – and so now, at least if the current trajectory holds, he's going to be in power for another six or something years at least. It would seem that this strategy on the part of the Trump administration to batter Venezuela with maximum sanctions and attempt to impose regime change – and much of these same policies were then replicated or continued by the Biden administration, which reimposed many of the Trump era sanctions on Venezuela – it seems like it's been a manifest failure to me, even by its own terms or by its own stated criteria for what the goal would be of the policy. What am I missing?